Ran across
the link to this kind of outdated article on my friend’s wall on facebook. Read
it twice and I am of the opinion this piece should be an obligatory read for
most today’s parents who bring up their offspring to become… Why do they call
the future adults zombie creatures?
It is not a
secret that gap between people born in 1970s and 1980s is far bigger than the
gap between the latter and born in 1990s. I can say nothing about differences
between people born in 1990s and those born in 2000s since I lack sample to
make such comparison. This abyss between people of nearly the same age is not
just the effect of growing up in different economic and technological
environment, but is an element of a deeper social change. In big cities
childhood in late PRL or in years of nascent capitalism differed much from
today’s pattern of childhood, moreover communication was not facilitated by the
Internet and mobile devices; yet these differences make up just the tip of the
iceberg.
How sensitive
children are is a clear consequence of how parents raise them. An average child
is told on every step dangers loom all around. Imagine you are told not to
stroke an animal since it may bite you or bacteria from its fur may jump into
you… Imagine you are instructed to wear a helmet protecting your limbs,
otherwise learning to ride a two-wheel bike you will get bruised… Imagine you
are prevented from taking a mountain-hiking trip or a canoe trip, because for a
few days you would live without electricity, sleep in a tent and wash yourself
in cold water…
Parents’
attempts to assure comfort to their children and to save them from harm at any
price at the end of the day do more harm than good. Childhood by definition
ought to be the most carefree period in life. But childhood and youth are the
period of learning and experiencing, also learning from one’s own mistakes
which usually do not kill a child, but make them stronger and wiser. If
children are to manage on their own in their early adulthood they need to be
taught to take decisions and responsibility for them.
Today’s
parents who do everything for and instead of their children not only fail to
teach them taking decisions and responsibility, but also deprive their
offspring of the carefree element of their early years. There is a built-in
pressure to meet parents’ expectations instead of enjoying childhood the way a
child wants. Yet a contemporary child would not want to enjoy it the way I did
it over twenty years ago, since patterns of pastime activities have changed. Go
to any housing estate and look out for children aged less than 10 running
around or riding bikes nearly without parents’ care. Such was the reality in
mid-1990s!
While
today, parents want to spare their children as much strain as possible and
bring them up to become frail adults, shying away from hardships or becoming
so-called kidults. Pains, suffering, defeats, eating humble pie, etc. are the
elements of brutal life. Children should rather be supported in coping with
them, rather than shielded from them…
The article
dwells on the appalling fitness of Polish children. I stick to my theory that
today’s children’s life expectancy will be lower than today’s middle-aged people’s. The first and foremost reason is that children move too little,
spending too much time staring at smartphone. The second cause is less
straightforward, namely physical activity is, I argue, over-coordinated, not
spontaneous. Parents sign up their offspring for horse-riding classes, swimming
lessons, tennis lessons, etc. which in essence is commendable, yet takes away
the element of spontaneity… I wonder how many parents signing their children up
for various classes ask if their offspring really want to attend them and how
many do it because of the peer pressure or to fulfil their own ambitions.
On top of
this an average child of well-off educated parents gets what they want without
even asking. Such behaviours among parents have been witnessed more than ten
years ago, hence we already see young adults claiming they deserve to get
something, but offering nothing or little in return. If children think they are
exceptional and the world should treat them as a hub of the universe, the fault
lies with their parents…
The advent
of social media and the culture of sharing one’s life with others via them has
changed motives which drive people’s activities. Author of the article incites
his audience to ask a question whether youngsters do things for themselves of
to impress other people. The quintessence of leading a happy life is doing
things for one’s own pleasure. I see nothing wrong in sharing with other people
things done for one’s own pleasure (and do it occasionally, may facebook
fellows know I’m having fun), yet if impressing others becomes a primary
motivation for choosing what to do in free time, a person falling victim to
such way of thinking will sooner or later get hurt.
Such
reasoning leads to dangerous conclusion, namely the measure of how much a
youngster is worth is how much appreciation they receive. Number of likes under
a person’s post on facebook becomes a benchmark of who’s more trendy, cool or…
valuable…
The author
also points up helplessness of youngsters in simple situations. Sewing in a
ripped button, mending a leaking tap, changing a light bulb for many young
people, not taught to cope with such tasks at home, have become insurmountable
problems. This is horrifying, yet I have witnessed situations when youngsters
were helpless staring at an overloaded rubbish bin, not coming up with a
solution that emptying it (throwing away rubbish) would help…
This is
also a matter of widespread consumerism. In the economy propelled by disposable
items which once wear out or break down are replaced by brand-new ones. Though
socialist economy was bound to collapse and had built-in depravity, it taught
people resourcefulness. If you could not come by brand-new stuff, you had to
seek ways to repair the old one, plus oddly enough, what was manufactured,
though technically obsolete was much more durable. In today’s capitalism once a
customer buys a new item, its vendor already plans how to attract the customer
again (planned obsolescence is one of the tools). In the economy of shortage,
with supply falling short of demand, a vendor was bending down backwards to
keep the customer away from it for many years, so that insufficient supply of
goods was less visible.
There is no
use in protecting children from life’s hardships. The later they face up to
them, the more painful the head-on collision with brutality will be.
Criticise
children wisely, get them accustomed to criticism. Balance stick and carrot in
upbringing. Praise when due, but teach to draw conclusions from judgmental
remarks instead of taking umbrage with the world.
As the
author points out towards the end of his essay (quite long, I once read for an
average Pole a text longer than four A4 pages is too long to absorb, while the
one on which I base my today’s post is six A4 pages long), not learning to
overcome problems leads to mental diseases in early adulthood. Statistics
quoted by the author of the percentage of students prone to depression,
neurosis and other mental problems is horrifying. If those number are true,
they illustrate the price paid for flying away from the golden cage of carefree
childhood…
BTW, what’s
the English for pierdoła? None of the translations found on the spot online
renders properly the context in which the word was used in the title of the
article…
No comments:
Post a Comment